You know soccer is growing in US popularity when even Teddy Roosevelt is getting in on the action.
Simplest Scenarios
- Germany: Advance with win/draw vs. USA
- United States: Advance with win/draw vs. GER
- Portugal: Advance with win vs. GHA AND GER/USA do not tie, IF POR wins tiebreak with loser (see below)
- Ghana: Advance with win vs. POR AND GER/USA do not tie, IF GHA wins tiebreak with loser (see below)
U.S. Scenarios
- Win/draw vs. Germany
- Loss and Portugal-Ghana draw
- Loss and win tiebreaker vs. Portugal-Ghana winner
Updated Soccer Power Index odds to advance:
(All the group percentages available at fivethirtyeight.com)
- Germany: 99.7 percent
- United States: 75.8 percent
- Ghana: 19.1 percent
- Portugal: 5.4 percent
Tiebreakers
If the United States loses, Ghana would qualify instead if either game is decided by a margin of two goals or more. If the U.S. loses by one goal, Ghana would need to win by two goals or be involved in a higher-scoring one-goal win. For instance, a 1-0 scoreline in both games would put the United States through on head-to-head. So, if the U.S. loses 1-0, then Ghana must win 2-1 to qualify on goals scored.
To surpass the U.S., Portugal will need a goal-difference swing of five (head-to-head is level). So for instance, Portugal would need to win 3-0 and U.S. lose 2-0, among other equivalent scorelines. The teams will draw lots if goal difference is identical (this would happen with a 3-0 U.S. defeat and a 2-0 Portugal win, for example).
Suppose you, me, and a third party (let's call him Joe) form a three-team mini-league, and we each play each other once.I understand that's the way the rules are set - but how does that make any sense? I believe FIFA is the only one who does it this way.
If it comes down to me & you are tied, and I beat you the only time we played each other, how can anything else possibly come into play?
I guess I should expect nothing better from an organization that will have 2-game playoffs with something like "Goals scored on the road" as a tiebreaker
Possibly to encourage attacking football, yes you can sit back & defend that one goal lead but if you keep attacking and win by three or four then that can drastically help your chances of qualifying. And considering the occasional dull as dishwater periods football goes through where teams think defence is all is that really such a bad idea?I understand that's the way the rules are set - but how does that make any sense? I believe FIFA is the only one who does it this way.
If it comes down to me & you are tied, and I beat you the only time we played each other, how can anything else possibly come into play?
I guess I should expect nothing better from an organization that will have 2-game playoffs with something like "Goals scored on the road" as a tiebreaker
At this point - you have a 3-way tie where A>B, B>C & C>A. THIS is what things like differential & total goals scored are for. But when there are two teams involved in the tie, there is no excuse to not use H2H result as the first tie breaker.Suppose you, me, and a third party (let's call him Joe) form a three-team mini-league, and we each play each other once.
For the first game, I beat you 1-0.
Then, for the next two games, Joe beats me 2-0, while you beat Joe 5-0.
Who's the best team and who's the worst team in this mini-league?
Here's the thing though, advancement from the group stage is based on your performance overall in the group. When two teams are tied on points, they don't want to just look at how they did against each other, they also want to look at how they did overall.At this point - you have a 3-way tie where A>B, B>C & C>A. THIS is what things like differential & total goals scored are for. But when there are two teams involved in the tie, there is no excuse to not use H2H result as the first tie breaker.
The ONLY reasoning, as mroosc said above, is to discourage slow play - in order to make what many already consider a "boring" sport even more so. But at the expense of the team who "earned" the advantage of being able to "slow play" by winning the H2H matchup.
Of course, the obvious answer is - don't lose. Easier said than done.
Except, you know, for that one time when Team A actually played & beat Team B.The two teams are now equal on 3 points. Based on head-to-head results, it would appear that Team A is better than Team B. But based on overall results in the group, Team B performed better than Team A.
Maybe Team A had a guy out injured, who only returned in the second and third games. Maybe Team A just tend to start slowly at tournaments. Maybe Team B's tactics are particularly effective against Team A, but aren't as useful against other teams.Except, you know, for that one time when Team A actually played & beat Team B.
Tell us more.Eh, oh well.
On a completely unrelated note, there's a really hot girl I know who's taunting me mercilessly, because she's from Ecuador and they're doing pretty well this World Cup, while my team England are out. She's never forgiven me for all the gloating I did when England beat Ecuador in the 2006 World Cup.
But she's hot, so it's all okay.
Welcome to what every football fan has been saying for some twenty years now. Ridiculous.Red card for a bad tackle... harsh but whatever... however a player gets BITTEN and no officials saw that? Even in this day and age... with all the technology where EVERYONE not wearing a zebra shirt can see this but THEY can't? Time to change how Refs work. Should have been a Red card.
*Pokes BErt with a stick**opens eyes*
*breathes*
WOOOOOOOOOOOOO
*dies anyway*